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Agenda - 08-22-1983
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Agenda - 08-22-1983
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4/27/2017 8:58:28 AM
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BOCC
Date
8/22/1983
Meeting Type
Public Hearing
Document Type
Agenda
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Minutes - 19830822
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\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\1980's\1983
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HYDROLOGY <br /> Hydrology deals with the occurance and distribution of water. More spe- <br /> cifically, analyslis of the hydrology of an area includes consideration of the <br /> factors preci'pitaltion , stream drainage systems, surface and subsurface water <br /> resources and potential for flooding. <br /> Orange County receives about 43 inches of precipitation a year. Although <br /> the precipitation is fairly evenly distributed throughout the year, the di-rest <br /> season is the fall . July and August are the wettest months with the precipi- <br /> tation total augmented by thundershowers. <br /> Major Features. The Eno River is the largest flowing body of water in the <br /> Harmon Young ArealStudy. It is located along the northern boundary of the area <br /> study and is one of the main streams in the Neuse drainage basin. The Eno <br /> drains into the Flat River in Durham County. <br /> Cates Creek is the second largest stream in the area study. This creek <br /> flows in a northerly direction into the Eno River and is located between Old <br /> and New 86. <br /> Stoney Creek the next largest stream in the area study, originates in <br /> the southeastern corner and flows in a southerly direction, where it inter- <br /> sect with a second branch of the Creek. Stoney Creek eventually flows back <br /> to the Eno River. <br /> There are a number of small impoundment areas located throughout the <br /> study area. Most of these were, or are, being used as farit ponds. <br /> Drainage Patterns. With the numerous ridge lines running in a north- <br /> south direction throughout the area, the majority of surface drainage flows <br /> in an east-west dilrection. <br /> The surface drainage in the north-west section of the study area flows into <br /> a number of small lunnamed streams and creeks that empty into the Eno River. <br /> Runoff from the central portion of the study area flows into Cates Creek which <br /> also empties into the Eno. Stoney Creek, in the southeastern corner of the <br /> study area, colleets the majority of drainage in that area. <br /> Floodplains . I Floodplains are those areas which will be inundated by water <br /> in a specific storm event, normally defined as that storm whose probability for <br /> occuring is once every one hundred years. (SEE Hydrology-Vegetation Map) . There <br /> are two streams in the Harmon Young Area Study which are associated with a 100 <br /> year floodplains as designated on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineer Flood Maps . <br /> The Eno River is characterized by a large area within the northernmost edge of <br /> the study area that would be considered 100 year floodplain, while Cates Creek <br /> has a more defined, narrower floodplain that runs the entire north-south <br /> length of the area' study. <br /> Development lmitatiomsalong streams with floodplains and potential for <br /> flooding must be observed. In addition, if a stream is within a water supply <br /> watershed, its impOrtance is compounded as pollution or sedimentation of the <br /> streams could result in eventual damage to the water supply source. <br />
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